Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Robert Granjon (Paris, c. 1513 - Rome, 1590) was a French punchcutter, a designer and creator of metal type, and printer. [1] [2] [3] He worked in Paris , Lyon , Antwerp , and Rome . [1] He is best known for having introduced the typeface style Civilité , for his many italic types and his fleuron designs, although he worked across all genres ...

  2. views 1,670,920 updated. Robert Granjon (grăn´jən, Fr. rōbĕr´ gräNzhôN´), fl. 1545–88, French designer of type and printer. He began his work in Paris and afterward worked in Lyons, Antwerp, and Rome. The types that he designed and made included roman, italic, Greek, Hebrew, and Syriac.

  3. Jun 6, 2020 · Robert Granjon (1513–90) was a French type designer who, in 1557, invented a new style of typeface that was modeled on contemporary handwriting. It later came to be know as Civilité, after the civilité of etiquette books that the typeface often appeared in.

  4. People also ask

  5. contribution to typography. …departures in type design was Robert Granjon, who, in addition to fashioning some notable versions of Garamond types, also tried—with his type called Civilité—to create a fourth major typeface to be different from and stand alongside roman, italic, and Gothic.

  6. This book, by typographic scholar Hendrik Vervliet, is a survey of the life and work of the sixteenth-century letter-cutter Robert Granjon (1513-1590). With his contemporary Claude Garamont, he is considered one of the best and most influential figures in the history of type design.

    • Robert Granjon1
    • Robert Granjon2
    • Robert Granjon3
    • Robert Granjon4
    • Robert Granjon5
  7. Robert Granjon (1513-90) was a French type designer, punchcutter, and printer. He worked in Paris, Lyon, Frankfurt, Antwerp, and Rome. He also introduced the typeface Civilité. Some of the materials used by Granjon, including matrices and punches are preserved in the Plantin-Moretus Museum in Antwerp.

  8. Galliard: a modern revival of the types of Robert Granjon. Matthew Carter. The types that Galliard hopes to revive were cut by a French artist, Robert Granjon, who worked between about 1540 and 1590. I should begin by sketching in the historical circumstances.

  1. People also search for